TY - JOUR
T1 - Climate targets by major steel companies
T2 - An assessment of collective ambition and planned emission reduction measures
AU - de Villafranca Casas, Maria Jose
AU - Smit, Sybrig
AU - Nilsson, Anna
AU - Kuramochi, Takeshi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s)
PY - 2023/11/7
Y1 - 2023/11/7
N2 - This article systematically assesses the status, robustness, and potential impact of greenhouse gas emission reduction targets set by the largest steel producer companies as of mid-2022. The assessment covers the 60 largest steel companies by volume, accounting for more than 60 % of global steel production. Data on company-level greenhouse gas emission reduction targets and emission reduction measures were collected from publicly available documents. We found that only 30 companies have their own greenhouse gas emission reduction targets of varying timeframes between 2025 and 2060. Even when excluding the 15 Chinese state-owned companies that are under the national 2060 net zero target, 15 companies had no emission reduction targets. Twenty-one companies had long-term targets (2040 or after), of which 18 were net zero emission targets; all but one also had interim targets. If all climate targets identified among the 60 companies are achieved, annual CO2 emissions for the 60 companies could be reduced by up to 12 % by 2030 and up to 39 % by 2050 in comparison to a baseline scenario. Assuming a gradual increase in global crude steel demand from 1.9 Gt in 2019 to 2.5 Gt in 2050 and assuming similar trends for the rest of the global iron and steel sector as observed for the 60 companies, we estimate that the current ambition of the global iron and steel sector on emission reductions would lead to a reduction of 38 % to 53 % by 2050 from 2019 levels (3.4 GtCO2 to 1.6–2.1 GtCO2), or compared to a 32 % to 43 % reduction in a baseline scenario in 2050. Steel companies are also lagging in setting clear emission reduction plans to achieve their targets. We found that 14 out of the 30 steel producers with targets did not provide an emission reduction plan. The most popular measures amongst the 16 companies that identified at least one measure to achieve their target in their emission reduction plans were hydrogen-based DRI (n = 14), enhanced use of renewable electricity (n = 13) and Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCU/S) for blast furnaces (n = 9). While it is encouraging that the steel companies have started acting toward long-term deep decarbonisation, our findings suggest that there is a long way ahead and the action needs to be accelerated considerably.
AB - This article systematically assesses the status, robustness, and potential impact of greenhouse gas emission reduction targets set by the largest steel producer companies as of mid-2022. The assessment covers the 60 largest steel companies by volume, accounting for more than 60 % of global steel production. Data on company-level greenhouse gas emission reduction targets and emission reduction measures were collected from publicly available documents. We found that only 30 companies have their own greenhouse gas emission reduction targets of varying timeframes between 2025 and 2060. Even when excluding the 15 Chinese state-owned companies that are under the national 2060 net zero target, 15 companies had no emission reduction targets. Twenty-one companies had long-term targets (2040 or after), of which 18 were net zero emission targets; all but one also had interim targets. If all climate targets identified among the 60 companies are achieved, annual CO2 emissions for the 60 companies could be reduced by up to 12 % by 2030 and up to 39 % by 2050 in comparison to a baseline scenario. Assuming a gradual increase in global crude steel demand from 1.9 Gt in 2019 to 2.5 Gt in 2050 and assuming similar trends for the rest of the global iron and steel sector as observed for the 60 companies, we estimate that the current ambition of the global iron and steel sector on emission reductions would lead to a reduction of 38 % to 53 % by 2050 from 2019 levels (3.4 GtCO2 to 1.6–2.1 GtCO2), or compared to a 32 % to 43 % reduction in a baseline scenario in 2050. Steel companies are also lagging in setting clear emission reduction plans to achieve their targets. We found that 14 out of the 30 steel producers with targets did not provide an emission reduction plan. The most popular measures amongst the 16 companies that identified at least one measure to achieve their target in their emission reduction plans were hydrogen-based DRI (n = 14), enhanced use of renewable electricity (n = 13) and Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCU/S) for blast furnaces (n = 9). While it is encouraging that the steel companies have started acting toward long-term deep decarbonisation, our findings suggest that there is a long way ahead and the action needs to be accelerated considerably.
KW - Corporate climate action
KW - Decarbonisation
KW - Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG)
KW - Iron and steel industry
KW - Paris Agreement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85182322572&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.egycc.2023.100120
DO - 10.1016/j.egycc.2023.100120
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85182322572
SN - 2666-2787
VL - 5
JO - Energy and Climate Change
JF - Energy and Climate Change
M1 - 100120
ER -